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April's Lowdown

April 2008, Volume 10, Number 4

Edited by Jim Hightower and Phillip Frazer

What 8 years of BushCheney have done to our economy

Harry Truman said, "No man should be allowed to be president who doesn't understand hogs." That's never been more true than it will be for the man or woman who walks into the White House on January 20, 2009.

If you've ever entered an enclosed, industrialized hog facility where hundreds of fattening porcines live out their short lives, you know that the smell of pig excrement completely redefines "stink." This stench will knock you to your knees, sear your lungs and brain, and make you scream for mercy. For nearly eight years, the White House has been a confined hog pen for corporate porkers, right-wing ideologues, imperialists, autocrats, and other swinish mess-makers. America's next president must not only set a new direction but will also have to clean up the mess and eradicate the stink left by the Bushites.

To help presidential contenders, congressional candidates and the rest of us get perspective on the odiferous legacy of the Bush-Cheney regime, the Lowdown is presenting a two-part factual accounting of the administration's achievements since 2001. This issue will feature Bush's domestic performance, and the May issue will highlight his international agenda. Hold your nose--and get out your scrubbers.

The 3 biggest hits to the economy

Bush's tax cuts for the rich have reduced annual tax revenue available for public needs by $300 billion each year.

BushCheney's occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq has cost $700 billion, according to the Congressional Research Service. That's about $400 million a day. Nobel Prizewinning economist Joseph Stiglitz says the tab is well over $2 trillion when you add rehabilitation for injured vets, replacement of military hardware, and the value of things we could have produced (but didn't) with that money over the past seven years.

Bushites have finished off the deregulation of banking that began in earnest during Bill Clinton's presidency. This ideological madness has caused the collapse of investment funds, banks, and the stock value of corporations that depend on them (which is to say most of Wall Street and much of the financial world), as well as a steep decline in the value of most homes in America and a sharp rise in the cost of living in them.

Bush says:"In the long run, Americans can be confident about our economic growth."(State of the Union speech 2008)

The facts say: While the overall economy has grown, the wages of the average worker have not even kept up with inflation. Meanwhile, nearly five million more Americans have fallen into poverty since 2001.

Corporate profits before tax

$719.2 billion

$1,769.5 billion

Corporate profits after tax*

$503.8 billion

$1,351.9 billion*

Pharmaceutical company profits (top 9) (top12)**

$30 billion

$80 billion

Cost of imported consumer goods

$1,147 billion

$1,954 billion

*Standard & Poor’s 500 top corporations’ profits more than doubled in the period 2001-2005 and reached 8.6% of Gross Domestic Product in 2006–the highest percentage of GDP on record.

**Drug-companies’ profits continue to be around 18.5% of their sales income, versus 3.1%for other top-500 companies.

Number of billionaires

186

415

Their combined wealth

$816 billion

$3.5 trillion

Average salary of top 500 corp CEOs in 2007

$15.2 million

In 2006, buyout mogul Henry Kravis paid himself $51,400...an hour.

Bush tax cuts to the top 1% 2001-2007

$546 billion

The top 1% include many more Wall Street financiers than CEOs. The 25 highest-paid hedge-fund managers are earning more than the CEOs of the largest 500 companies combined. Several of these fund managers are taking home more than a billion dollars a year. And guess what? Democratic party campaigns get twice as much in contributions from hedge-fund types as do Republicans!

EARNING

Median pre-tax household income

$49,158

$48,201

decrease for African American households under Bush

$2,766

decrease for Asian American households

$1,381

decrease for Hispanic households

$1,043

decrease for white households

$745

WORKING

Salary of full-time minimum-wage earner in 2007

$12,168

Increase in productivity of American workers under Bush

18%

Increase in real earnings of American workers under Bush

9%

Total # manufacturing jobs

17.3 million

14.2 million

National unemployment rate

3.5%

5%

Number unemployed Americans

5.6 million

7.7 million

Number including discouraged or underemployed

9.9 million

13.5 million

LIVING

Americans living in poverty

31.6 million

36.5 million

Americans going hungry according to USDA

31 million

38.2 million

Cost of a gallon of milk

$3

$3.79

Cost of a loaf of bread

$.98

$1.32

Rent, 2-bedroom home, Los Angeles (month)

$1,658

$2,229

Rent, 1-bedroom home, Boston (month)

$1,453

$2,000

Total consumer credit debt

$7.65 trillion

$12.8 trillion

Personal savings rate

+2.3%

-0.5%

HOMEOWNERS & RENTERS

Increase in number of home foreclosures from 2006

68%

Households currently at high risk of foreclosure

2 million

Households paying more than half their income for housing

13 million

Households unable to afford even the lowest-priced home rentals in the U.S.

2.8 million

While military spending has grown 7.5% since Bush took office, spending on almost all domestic discretionary programs has been cut. "Discretionary" means that Congress and the administration can decide, year by year, how much each program deserves. Under BushCheney, that means less of anything that serves the common good, like (in order of size) education, highways and other ground transportation, housing assistance, biomedical research, federal law enforcement, public-health services, regulation of air traffic, and space flight.

The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities has tracked federal spending over the course of BushCheney's reign of error and concludes that almost all of these programs have shrunk when measured in relation to the growth of the economy as a whole. The Center reports that outlays to mandated federal programs--Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid--have declined 2.4%, while discretionary programs have been cut by 3.7%.

The World Health Organization ranks U.S. health care 37th in the world, behind France (1), Singapore (6), Japan (10), United Kingdom (18), Colombia (22), and Costa Rica (36). Of six nations studied by the New York-based commonwealth Fund--Australia, Canada, Germany, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States-- the U.S. ranks last.

Americans without health insurance

38.4 million

46.9 million

Children without health insurance

8.7 million

African American households uninsured

20.5%

Asian American households uninsured

15.5%

Hispanic households uninsured

34.1%

White households uninsured

10.8%

Cost of family health insurance per year

$6,230

$12,106

Cost of family health insurance per month

$519

$1,009

FOOD SAFETY

Number of shipments of agricultural imports

4.5 million

9 million

Number of U.S. FDA inspectors of imports

3,500

3,488

Percentage of imported food inspected by FDA

1.3%

Bush says: "We have increased funding for veterans by more than 95 percent." (State of the Union speech 2008)

THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH SAYS: In 2004 nearly 1.8 million veterans were uninsured and unable to get care in veterans' facilities. An additional 3.8 million members of their households were also uninsured and ineligible for VA care. No new study has been done since 2004 but things have only gotten worse.

Bush says: "a new $300 million program called Pell Grants for Kids [will] help liberate poor children trapped in failing public schools." Bush's Pell Grants for Kids is a plan to shift government funding from public schools to private schools, mostly Christian schools.

The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) says: the average adjusted school mean for Conservative Christian schools "in reading was not significantly different from that of public schools. In mathematics, the average adjusted school mean for Conservative Christian schools was significantly lower than that of public schools."

Average cost/year at a public 4-year college

$8,400

$13,000

Average cost/year at a private 4-year college

$22,000

$29,000

Average debt shouldered by college graduates

$12,000

$21,000

Gap between maximum federal Pell Grant and cost of a 4-year degree in a public school

$5,282

$8,746

Bush says:"We reaffirm our pledge to help them build stronger and better than before." (State of the Union speech 2008)

THE U.S. CENSUS BUREAU SAYS: "Almost 40% of the people displaced from New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina [lived] below the poverty line last year," and "nearly a third of those who fled the hurricane could not find jobs last year, and thousands more [had given up] trying."

Average price of a gallon of home-heating oil

$1.40

$3.39

Average price of a gallon of gas

$1.47

$3.14

Portion of our liquid fuels imported

52.75%

60.38%

...deals with the housing crisis by proposing to:

Cut the number of housing vouchers that help very poor people pay their rent by 100,000.

Cut the budget for housing for poor elderly people by 27%.

Cut the budget for housing for people with disabilities by 32%.

Cut the fund for repair and maintenance of public housing by 17% and eliminate funding to repair public housing damaged by natural disasters.

Cut the lead-hazard reduction funds by 20%.

Cut the block grants to cities and states for housing and community-development programs by 18%.